Honduran government providing free internet to 75,000 households
Honduras is among the poorest countries in Central America and has long been plagued by an unstable political framework which has rendered telecom sector reform difficult. This has created real difficulties for telcos as well as consumers. Fixed-line teledensity, at only 4.9%, is significantly lower than the Latin American and Caribbean average. Poor fixed-line infrastructure has been exacerbated by low investment and topographical difficulties which have made investment in rural areas unattractive or uneconomical. Consequently, the internet has been slow to develop. DSL and cable modem technologies are available but are relatively expensive and thus take-up has been low thus far, while higher speed services are largely restricted to the major urban centres. Nevertheless, the demand for broadband is steadily increasing and there has been some investment in network upgrades to fibre-based infrastructure.On the positive side, these factors have encouraged consumer take-up of mobile services, a sector where there is lively competition supported by international investment. Even so, mobile penetration is substantially below the regional average. Revenue growth from the mobile sector looks promising in coming years as operators invest in their networks, expand their reach and upgrade their capabilities to accommodate mobile broadband services. Mobile data as a proportion of overall mobile revenue has increased steadily, though low-end SMS services will continue to account for the bulk of data revenue for some years.
Political developments during the last few years have not facilitated the much-needed reform of legislation governing the telecoms sector. Partly this is due to political stalemate and ineffective legislators, but underlying the difficulties are the close ties between executives at the incumbent Hondutel and key members of the government.
The publisher notes that the COVID-19 pandemic continues to have a significant impact on the telecoms market. On the consumer side, spending on telecoms services and devices is under pressure from the financial effect of large-scale job losses and the consequent restriction on disposable incomes. However, the crucial nature of telecom services, both for general communication as well as a tool for home-working, has offset such pressures. In many markets the net effect has been a reduced (and sometimes negative) subscriber growth, which will continue into 2021.
Overall progress towards 5G has been postponed or curtailed in some countries.
Although it is challenging to predict and interpret the long-term impacts of the crisis as it develops, these have been acknowledged in the industry forecasts contained in this report.
The report also covers the responses of the telecom operators as well as government agencies and regulators as they react to the crisis to ensure that citizens can continue to make optimum use of telecom services. This can be reflected in subsidy schemes and the promotion of tele-health and tele-education, among other solutions.
Key Developments:
- Government provides free internet to around 75,000 households in Honduras;
- BT Group sells its operations and infrastructure in Latin America to CIH Telecommunications Americas;
- Millicom selects US-based Affirmed Networks to deploy cloud-based, 5G-ready core network for its Latin America units;
- Regulator frees up 3.5GHz spectrum for mobile use;
- Tigo and Amazon Web Services partner to offer cloud services;
Table of Contents
- Key statistics
- Regional Latin America Market Comparison
- Telecom Maturity Index by tier
- Market Leaders
- Market Challengers
- Market Emergents
- South America Telecom Maturity Index
- Central America Telecom Maturity Index
- TMI versus GDP
- Mobile and mobile broadband penetration
- Fixed and mobile broadband penetration
- Country overview
- COVID-19 and its impact on the telecom sector
- Economic considerations and responses
- Subscribers
- Infrastructure
- Telecommunications market
- Historical overview
- Regulatory environment
- Regulatory authority
- Fixed-line developments
- Privatisation
- CAFTA-DR
- Foreign investment
- Telecom sector liberalisation
- ˜Telephony for All program
- Mobile market developments
- Mobile Number Portability (MNP)
- Spectrum auctions
- Mobile market
- Market analysis
- Mobile statistics
- Mobile voice
- Mobile data
- Mobile broadband
- Mobile infrastructure
- 4G (LTE)
- 3G
- Major mobile operators
- Tigo Honduras
- Claro Honduras
- Hondutel Movil
- Digicel
- Mobile applications
- Smart applications
- M-money
- Fixed-line broadband market
- Introduction and statistical overview
- Broadband statistics
- Fibre-to-the-Premises (FttP) networks
- Major ISPs
- Community Telecentres
- Fixed network operators
- Hondutel
- Tele+ (Comunitel)
- MultiData
- Digital Economy
- e-Government
- e-Learning
- Telecommunications infrastructure
- Overview of the national telecom network
- International infrastructure
- Interconnection with other Central American countries
- Submarine cable networks
- Satellite networks
- Infrastructure developments
- Wireless Local Loop (WLL)
- Internet Exchange Point (IXP)
- Appendix - Historic data
- Glossary of abbreviations
- Related reports
List of Tables
List of Charts
List of Exhibits
Companies Mentioned
- Hondutel
- Comunitel
- MultiData
- Millicom (Tigo)
- Digicel
- Amorica Móvil (Claro)
- National Telecommunications Commission (Conatel),